The Catcher in the Rye is told
by, and is about, a teenager in his junior year of high school at Pencey Prep.
Throughout the story he is just telling you of his adventures around New York
City. Now, one might begin to ponder at the fact that he is a junior in high
school, and is wondering around New York City. Well, it is because although the
main character, Holden Caulfield, is in a family of intellectual thinkers (his
brother is a writer who lives in Hollywood), Holden is a rather lazy scholar,
resulting in the fact that he was expelled. Holden does not want his parents to
find out that he was expelled, so he waits until the Christmas break on the
Wednesday of the next week to go home and visit family. At that time, when he
arrived home he planned to either inform his parents of the tragic news, or run
away and work somewhere else, visiting when able. He has a few days to spend in
New York before Christmas break and he tells us of his crazy adventures,
including the fun places he goes and the interesting people he meets and talks
to.
This book perfectly outlines the
basic thoughts and actions that the average teenager feels and experiences when
alone, or when the chance comes up to make a decision. The writing is in a
style that a teenager would most likely be speaking in, as a young adult in the
50’s- including using the same phrases over and over again, using slang and
swearing to get his point across no matter what the case is and no matter who
he is talking to. On multiple occasions, to get his point across, Holden
mentions the fact that he is stupid. However, I do not think he is dumb. It is
just that he does not care. Other than the fact that he doesn’t care, He seems
to be quite smart and caring. For instance, he has this daydream of a bunch of
children playing in a rye field, and it happens to be on the edge of a cliff,
and he is to be the sole guardian of the children if they fall of the cliff, to
catch them if they fall. To be the “Catcher in the Rye.” He thinks himself to
be the sole protector of children, or to protect their innocence. When in an
elementary school visiting, he sees graffiti which reads “f*** you”, and he is
infuriated with it, wiping it off with his sleeve, knowing that if a child saw
it they would be uncomfortable. He appreciates when a child like his sister, who
is expected to be at a lower level of language, understands what he is saying.
Throughout the book, Holden mentions how many people he thinks are good for
nothing d*** phonies. This might be a result of the fact that very smart people
constantly surround him, and his own brother is a genius writer in Hollywood.
Being used to being around these kind of people, he seems to build up a high
expectation about the entire society, looking down on them unless they are as
good as his smart friends, or his smart brother. Leading him to opinions that
are quite dreary and dull, showing that he is sort of a depressed person. In
fact, when he gets home, he has a mental break down and gets sick, resulting in
a stay in a mental help hospital to regain his well-being.
I give it an A! This book is a quite interesting
read to say the least. If you get past the constant use of the same phrases,
and constant swearing, it is a read that you wont forget. It has many things
that really put your teenage thoughts into consideration. It also shows what a
life for your first time without parents in a social environment can be very
different indeed. I highly encourage someone to read this; it is an experience
that will leave you pondering life for days. If you leave this suggestion
behind you, and decide not to take the short time to read this book and gain
new knowledge, then Holden Caulfield thinks that you are a big phony.
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